The Honest Muse: A Study in Augustan VerseClarendon P., 1967 - 309 Seiten |
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... manner could be matched with unadorned statement of fact ; Pope dis- covered a new kind of complexity to which he was driven by the need to preserve the fact and at the same time give disciplined rein to his imagination and feeling ...
... manner could be matched with unadorned statement of fact ; Pope dis- covered a new kind of complexity to which he was driven by the need to preserve the fact and at the same time give disciplined rein to his imagination and feeling ...
Seite 38
... manner was out of date . Literary conventions only succeed when they have some close if secret relation to the temper of their age , and this dignified style of Dryden's was no exception . He thought it proper to address the great in a ...
... manner was out of date . Literary conventions only succeed when they have some close if secret relation to the temper of their age , and this dignified style of Dryden's was no exception . He thought it proper to address the great in a ...
Seite 96
... manner , while the Satyr beginning ' Must I with Patience ever silent sit'3 is a sketch of an imitation of Juvenal's first Satire . Yet most of the time he was consciously affecting the Horatian attitude , not only in his Allusion to ...
... manner , while the Satyr beginning ' Must I with Patience ever silent sit'3 is a sketch of an imitation of Juvenal's first Satire . Yet most of the time he was consciously affecting the Horatian attitude , not only in his Allusion to ...
Inhalt
THE THREE MAIN FORMS | 16 |
DRYDEN | 27 |
THE CONVENTIONS OF SATIRE | 85 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Absalom and Achitophel Addison admiration already ancients argument attack attitude Augustan literature Augustan poetry Bolingbroke character compliment contemporary convention Countess of DORCHESTER death Dryden Dunciad effect eighteenth century elegiac elegy Eloisa to Abelard emotions epic Epilogue epistle Essay on Criticism example experience expression Fame familiar favourite feeling folly friends genius heart hero heroic Honest Muse Horace Horatian Ibid idea ideal imitation John Dryden Johnson kind language learned letters lines literary literature Lives lyric MacFlecknoe mind mode modern mood Moral Essays nature never Oldham Ovid panegyric passage passion pastoral peculiar pleasure poem poet poet's poetic political Pope Pope's praise pride Prologue qualities Quintilian reader realism reflection retirement Rochester satire satirist Satyr seems sense sentiment Shadwell sincerity society style Swift theme tion tone town tradition translation truth verse virtue Whig whole wits witty words writing wrote